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Man dies after being swept away during dog rescue on North Saskatchewan River

The search was called off late Tuesday afternoon for a man who tried to save a dog from the partially thawed North Saskatchewan River before vanishing into the frigid water over the noon hour. – Apr 6, 2021

The search was called off Tuesday afternoon for a 55-year-old man who tried to save a dog from the partially thawed North Saskatchewan River before vanishing into the frigid water.

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The search and rescue began around 12:30 p.m. at Sir Wilfrid Laurier Park, off of Buena Vista Road in west Edmonton.

It was reported to Edmonton Fire Rescue Services that a woman’s dog had run onto the river ice and a man who was also walking his dog stopped to help, going onto the ice after the dog.

The ice broke and both the man and dog fell into the river. Monica Ness was walking along the river with her friend when it happened and said she saw the terrifying situation unfold.

“The man fell,” she said, adding she saw him bob up and down a few times in the water and yell out. “His hand came up and then (I saw) him just disappear and that was the last time we seen him,” Ness said.

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A large search from the ground and the air quickly got underway.

Citizens along the river followed the man to keep him in sight as long as they could, the city said, while fire crews made their way down the river banks trying to access the water.

Seven firefighting units, including approximately six rapid deployment crafts were sent, arrived at the riverbanks within 15 minutes.

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The Groat Road bridge over the North Saskatchewan River on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. Global News

The man was carried down the river towards an ice shelf near the Groat Road Bridge. Crews tried, but were unable to rescue the man from the river before losing sight of him under the ice, the city said.

Two STARS Air Ambulance responded to the emergency, to help search from the air.

A STARS Air Ambulance helicopter searching the North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton, Alta. on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. Global News

One chopper that was already dropping a patient and crew off at the University of Alberta Hospital spent 15 minutes searching the river, before it had to abort and go back to base.

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A STARS spokesperson said a second chopper, which had flown in from Grande Prairie to drop off a patient and crew at the Grey Nuns Hospital, then spent another 25 minutes helping with the search before it too had to leave.

A STARS Air Ambulance helicopter searching the North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton, Alta. on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. Global News

Emergency personnel lined the river bank and firefighters with binoculars was seen scanning the water for any sign of the man.

Unfortunately the man was not found.

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“It is with great sadness that I confirm that the individual involved in today’s river rescue has not been located and we have since called off the search,” Fire Chief Joe Zatylny said.

“On behalf of Edmonton Fire Rescue Services, our thoughts go out to the individual, their family and friends.”

“That man was gone in 40 seconds,’ Ness said about her vantage point. “If we had life preserves and a rope we could of had at least that on him, if he’s going to attempt to do this — it would have saved his life,” Ness said.

“He lost his life trying to be a hero.”

The man’s body was recovered from the river 10 days later on April 16, Edmonton police confirmed.

An Edmonton firefighter searching the North Saskatchewan River with binoculars in Edmonton, Alta. on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. Global News

The tragedy comes after an unseasonably warm winter that saw Edmonton firefighters responding to more calls than normal of people walking on the ice of the North Saskatchewan River.

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On Wednesday, the City of Edmonton issued a news release saying Edmonton Fire Rescue Services has already responded to 65 water or ice rescue calls in 2021. According to the city, 48 of those involved rescues on the North Saskatchewan River, which more than doubles the number of river rescues firefighters took part in during the same time frame in 2020.

Walking on the ice is never safe, fire rescue cautions. The thickness varies due to several factors, including constantly moving water, changing river depths, chemicals in the water and warm spots near drainage outflow pipes.

In water that’s close to freezing, hypothermia can set in within minutes and people’s limbs go numb to the point of uselessness.

Even before that, the panic and shock of falling into icy cold water can be disorienting.

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An Edmonton firefighter searching the North Saskatchewan River with binoculars in Edmonton, Alta. on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. Global News

Edmonton Fire Rescue says if you see someone who has fallen through, don’t try to save them yourself: instead, call 911 and meet first responders when they arrive so you can tell them where the person was last seen.

This also applies to pets that fall though the ice.

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“This is a tragic reminder of the dangers of the river and that it is never safe to go onto the river ice,” Zatylny said about Tuesday’s incident.

The dog that fell into the river was rescued at 12:56 p.m.

The search for the man was called off just before 4 p.m. He has not been identified, however Edmonton police said the man was 55 years old.

The thawing North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton, Alta. on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. Global News

— With files from Chris Chacon, Global News

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